Thomas Cole National Historic Site: Birthplace of American Landscape Painting
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Step inside the home and studios of Thomas Cole, the English-born painter whose 1825 discovery of the Catskill Mountains launched America's first homegrown art movement, the Hudson River School. This episode walks through Cedar Grove, Cole's Federal-style house in Catskill, New York, from the porch view he painted more than any other subject to his original 1839 studio and the more architecturally ambitious 1846 New Studio he designed near the end of his life. Along the way, we cover Cole's surprising history as an early environmental writer, the Library Gallery's current exhibition “Contemporary Vistas,” and the Hudson River Skywalk that connects this site to Olana, the home of Cole's student Frederic Edwin Church. We also recommend two local spots to eat -- Creekside Restaurant and Bar on Catskill Creek and Subversive Malting and Brewing's farmhouse taproom -- plus nearby stops at CREATE Council on the Arts and Dutchman's Landing Park, and lodging options from Peloke's Motel to the bed-and-breakfasts of nearby Hudson, New York.
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